Viewer engagement in response to mixed and uniform emotional content in marketing videos—an electroencephalographic study

CC BY Logo DOI

This study presents the results of an experiment designed to investigate whether marketing videos containing mixed emotional content can sustain consumers interest longer compared to videos conveying a consistent emotional message. During the experiment, thirteen participants, wearing EEG (electroencephalographic) caps, were exposed to eight marketing videos with diverse emotional tones. Participant engagement was measured with an engagement index, a metric derived from the power of brain activity recorded over the frontal and parietal cortex and computed within three distinct frequency bands: theta (4–8 Hz), alpha (8–13 Hz), and beta (13–30 Hz). The outcomes indicated a statistically significant influence of emotional content type (mixed vs. consistent) on the duration of user engagement. Videos containing a mixed emotional message were notably more effective in sustaining user engagement, whereas the engagement level for videos with a consistent emotional message declined over time. The principal inference drawn from the study is that advertising materials conveying a consistent emotional message should be notably briefer than those featuring a mixed emotional message to achieve an equivalent level of message effectiveness, measured through engagement duration.

Tytuł
Viewer engagement in response to mixed and uniform emotional content in marketing videos—an electroencephalographic study
Twórca
Rejer Izabela
Słowa kluczowe
EEG; engagement index; emotional content; marketing videos
Słowa kluczowe
indeks zaangażowania; treści emocjonalne; filmy marketingowe
Współtwórca
Jankowski Jarosław
Dreger Justyna
Lorenz Krzysztof ORCID 0000-0002-2463-3916
Data
2024
Typ zasobu
artykuł
Identyfikator zasobu
DOI 10.3390/s24020517
Źródło
Sensors, 2024, vol. 24 iss. 2, [br. s.], 517
Język
angielski
Prawa autorskie
CC BY CC BY
Dyscyplina naukowa
Ekonomia i finanse; Dziedzina nauk społecznych
Kategorie
Publikacje pracowników US
Data udostępnienia23 sty 2024, 11:36:30
Data mod.23 sty 2024, 11:36:30
DostępPubliczny
Aktywnych wyświetleń0